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OSEF 2019 - Pitching competition

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
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Introduced by Jenny Tooth OBE - CEO of UK Business Angels Association and announcement of winning team of pitching competition - Introduced by Oliver Csendes, Pioneers.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
People
Jenny Tooth
Oliver Csendes
Keywords
business
entrepreneurship
Department: Saïd Business School
Date Added: 10/04/2019
Duration: 00:44:29

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OSEF 2019: Keynote: Imagine - The journey of Shazam

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
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OSEF 2019: Keynote: Imagine - The journey of Shazam, with Dhiraj Mukherjee, Co-Founder Shazam


Episode Information

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
People
Dhiraj Mukherjee
Keywords
business
entrepreneurship
Department: Saïd Business School
Date Added: 10/04/2019
Duration: 00:46:35

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OSEF 2019: Introduction to the afternoon keynote session

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
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OSEF 2019: Introduction to the afternoon keynote session, with Dean Peter Tufano, Saïd Business School

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
People
Dean Peter Tufano
Keywords
business
entrepreneurship
Department: Saïd Business School
Date Added: 10/04/2019
Duration: 00:01:46

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OSEF 2019: Keynote: Can mindfulness take place in the contemporary world?

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
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Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum 2019: Keynote: Can mindfulness take place in the contemporary world? Rich Pierson, CEO and Co-Founder of Headspace in conversation with Professor Willem Kuyken, University of Oxford.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
People
Rich Pierson
Keywords
business
entrepreneurship
OSEF
Department: Saïd Business School
Date Added: 10/04/2019
Duration: 00:53:55

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OSEF 2019 - Welcome to OSEF 'Keep calm and carry on'

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
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OSEF 2019 - Welcome to OSEF 'Keep calm and carry on' with Dean Peter Tufano, Saïd Business School.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
People
Dean Peter Tufano
Keywords
business
entrepreneurship
OSEF
Department: Saïd Business School
Date Added: 10/04/2019
Duration: 00:05:26

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Using evidence to overcome fake news about healthcare

Series
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Professor Carl Heneghan has extensive experience of working with the media. In this talk he will discuss some recent case examples, working with the BBC amongst others.

This talk will discuss how using an evidence-based approach can help overcome the growing problem of fake news, and provide insights on how to work with the media to ensure your message is not distorted, and will discuss why academics should engage more with the media and the wider public.

Professor Carl Heneghan is Director of CEBM, and an NHS Urgent Care GP, and has been interested for over twenty years in how we can use evidence in real world practice.

Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Evidence-Based Health Care
People
Carl Heneghan
Keywords
Health
Medicine
evidenced based healthcare
fake news
Department: Medical Sciences Division
Date Added: 09/04/2019
Duration:

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The Social Life of Modernism: Conversation, Literary Community, and Espionage in 1930s Calcutta

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
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This talk from TORCH Global South Visiting Professor Supriya Chaudhuri will be illustrated with images from the Parichay archives and related documents and correspondence.
Literary communities - often intersecting with the more exclusive segregations of coterie or group – are constitutive of the social life of modernism. In India as elsewhere, modernist communities were formed around a shared writing platform, that of the ‘little magazine’, and a shared social expression, that of conversation.

One such community in 1930s Calcutta grew up around the literary journal Parichay. Its members met regularly at the homes of the journal’s editors for sessions of animated discussion that are known in Bengali as adda. The group included not only poets and artists, but also scientists, historians, sociologists, disaffected British colonialists, nationalist politicians, and spies.

The 1930s was a period of literary radicalism, of shifting party allegiances and political fault-lines, linked to the fortunes of the Comintern, the rise of National Socialism and fascism in Europe, and the last phase of the struggle for modern nationhood in India. At the same time, the cosmopolitanism of the Parichay circle, responding to the major currents of international modernism and to the idea of a ‘world literature,’ was co-extensive with its commitment to its own ‘provincial’ literary culture.

Episode Information

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
People
Supriya Chaudhuri
Keywords
literature
spies
india
literary society
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 09/04/2019
Duration: 01:00:40

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What is the Modern? Temporality, Aesthetics, and Global Melancholy

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
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This talk from TORCH Global South Visiting Professor Supriya Chaudhuri will interrogate the temporality of the modern, the aesthetics of the modern, and as a somewhat cryptic afterthought, the mood of the modern, here categorized as melancholy.
But it will also ask how this term travels, how it is translated between cultures, and what it means in specific contexts of use.

The terms ‘modern’ and ‘modernity’ are notorious, global itinerants, on the one hand associated with a narrative of power, and on the other with a profoundly asymmetrical reading of history, producing its own internal disjuncture through the tendency of ‘aesthetic modernity’ to deny or refuse history, and to produce a characteristic, melancholic, ‘hollowing-out’ of the world of technological modernization.

How are these terms, and the narratives associated with them, read back in contexts of translation or re-use? Professor Chaudhuri will look at some examples from 19th and 20th century India to examine how the term ‘modern’ is translated, understood, and incorporated into aesthetic and social practice.

Episode Information

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
People
Supriya Chaudhuri
Keywords
literature
global south
aesthetics
melancholy
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 09/04/2019
Duration: 01:15:45

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Lincoln Leads in Law 2018

Series
Lincoln College
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What are the limits of the law?
Dr Barbara Havelková (Shaw Foundation Fellow in Law), alumna Shabana Mahmood (MP for Birmingham Ladywood), and Lincoln MCR student Lukas Wagner, discuss the limits of the law in this engaging finale to the 2018 Lincoln Leads seminar series.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Lincoln College
People
Barbara Havelkova
Shabana Mahmood
Lukas Wagner
Paul Stephens
Keywords
Lincoln College
lincoln leads
law
Department: Lincoln College
Date Added: 09/04/2019
Duration: 00:56:04

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Are we really advancing qualitative methods in health research?

Series
Evidence-Based Health Care
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For many good reasons, semi-structured interviews, focus groups, thematic analysis, and realist tales have become key tools within the qualitative researcher's methodological toolkit.

In this presentation, Dr Cassandra Phoenix invites the audience to consider the extent to which they may have (inadvertently) become the only tools within their toolkit. Drawing on examples from across the social sciences, she considers how else we might collect, analyse and represent qualitative data within health research, asking what it means and involves to truly advance qualitative research methods in this field.

The short video played for the audience can be seen at: https://vimeo.com/43182928.

Dr Cassandra Phoenix is a Reader in the Department for Health at the University of Bath. Her research examines ageing, health and wellbeing from a critical-socio-cultural perspective. She has authored numerous publications on topics including the social and cultural dimensions of: physical activity in mid and later life; the lived experiences of chronic conditions (e.g. late onset visual impairment, vestibular disorders); and engagement with nature. Cassandra's work is supported by a range of funders including ESRC, Wellcome Trust, Leverhulme Trust, WHO and the NIHR.

This talk was held as part of the Advanced Qualitative Research Methods course which is part of the Evidence-Based Health Care Programme.

Episode Information

Series
Evidence-Based Health Care
People
Cassandra Phoenix
Keywords
EBM
evidence based medicine
primary healthcare
Health Sciences
EBHC
evidence based healthcare
qualitative research
Department: Medical Sciences Division
Date Added: 08/04/2019
Duration:

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